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单词 reverter
释义

revertern.1

Brit. /rᵻˈvəːtə/, U.S. /rəˈvərdər/, /riˈvərdər/
Forms: late Middle English– reverter, 1500s–1600s reuerter.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French reverter.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman reverter (late 13th cent. or earlier in legal contexts), use as noun of reverter revert v.; compare -er suffix4. Compare earlier reversion n.1
1. Law. The return of an estate to the original owner, or his or her heirs, after the expiry of a grant or death of the grantee (for example, where property had been given to a man so long as he remains a bachelor) (cf. reversion n.1 1b). Also: the future interest (interest n. 1a) retained by a person who has granted an estate to another until the occurrence of some specified terminating event (more specifically possibility of reverter).
ΘΚΠ
society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > right to succeed to title, position, or estate > reversion > [noun]
reversionc1436
reverter1491
reverture1495
reverting1540
1491–2 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII (Electronic ed.) Parl. Oct. 1491 §18. m. 8 Londes..which to them be commen by discent, reverter or remaynder.
c1523 J. Rastell Expos. Terminorum Legum Anglorum sig. D.6v/2 Yf the tenaunt in the tayle dye without issu & he in the remaynder also dye without issu then the doner or hys heyers shall haue a formedone in the reuerter.
1574 tr. T. Littleton Tenures (new ed.) f. 115v Hee in the reuersion..is put to his action of Formedon in the reuerter [1528–30 reuerture].
a1628 J. Doddridge Eng. Lawyer (1631) 70 Never like to returne to the Lord by Escheat or Donor by Reverter.
a1641 J. Smyth Berkeley MSS (1883) II. 416 This family was..enriched with the reverter of their Barony of Berkeley.
1663 E. Waterhouse Fortescutus Illustratus xvii. 235 They would introduce all the instances of Conquest for their own aggrandization, and the suppression of all hopes of reverter to the Conquered.
1729 N. Tindal tr. P. Rapin de Thoyras Hist. Eng. VII. 575 Whether the Lands belonging to the Abbies ought to have returned to the Founders and Donors by way of Reverter.
1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. 192 A formedon in the reverter lieth, where there is a gift in tail, and afterwards..the reversion falls in upon the donor.
1806 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. VI. 267 A limitation of a term to one for life..leaves a possibility..of reverter in the executors of the testator.
1896 Act 59 & 60 Vict. c. 28 §15 The property shall not be deemed..to pass by reason only of its reverter to the disponer in his lifetime.
1922 Yale Law Rev. 31 291 The right to enter for condition broken and the possibility of reverter could descend but could not be transferred.
1955 Columbia Law Rev. 55 930 The government, claiming a reverter because of the resale, brought suit for declaration of ownership.
1984 Times 12 Mar. 9/1 The revertee's possibility of reverter automatically and simultaneously matured into a fee simple absolute.
2005 G. P. Fletcher & S. Sheppard Amer. Law in Global Context iii. xv. 324 The holder of the future interest, called a possibility of reverter, is considered then to have an immediate right to possess the land.
2. The action of coming back; return. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > return > [noun]
gaincome?c1225
retourc1330
gaincominga1340
again-cominga1382
returna1393
again-racea1400
returning?c1400
resortc1425
turningc1440
revertence?1457
repairingc1460
again-goinga1475
regress1478
revenuea1500
reversiona1500
back-coming1535
retire?1538
back-return1577
redition1595
regredience1648
reverter1663
epistrophe1814
1663 E. Waterhouse Fortescutus Illustratus i. 33 Truly in our England, there was a kind of Reverter..of Druydlike Ethnicism.
1667 E. Waterhouse Short Narr. Fire London 115 The advantage that accrewed to His Majesty upon his reverter.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

revertern.2

Brit. /rᵻˈvəːtə/, U.S. /rəˈvərdər/, /riˈvərdər/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: revert v., -er suffix1.
Etymology: < revert v. + -er suffix1. Compare earlier revert n. 2.
A person who or thing which reverts to a state or type.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > change of direction, reversion > [noun] > one who or that which reverses
reverser1623
recommencer1803
reverter1849
1849 J. Finn & A. M. Finn Diary 22 Dec. in A. Blumberg View from Jerusalem (1980) 46 A Kawass sent to Beyroot to accompany Elias Jikhohan, the reverter to Christianity from Moslemism.
1890 Spectator 15 Nov. An exact reverter to the wild type in both respects sometimes occurs.
1909 Westm. Gaz. 5 Apr. 1/2 Mr. Alfred Moul will be a reverter to type this evening.
2001 A. Savage in New Medieval Literatures 2000 4 46 The Other is the reverter to paganism.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2010; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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